Review: Estill Voice Training

This post is a bit of a departure from my usual music blogging, but since I spent all of last week at an Estill Voice Training Course – and I am now really wiped out from the combination of intense concentration and a very long commute – it seems appropriate to review it, at least briefly, for anyone else who may be interested in attending.

(Edited to add: briefly, eh?  I don’t think that word is actually in my repertoire…)

The first thing you need to know about Estill Voice Training is that it packs an *enormous* amount of information and work into a very short space of time.  I was very glad to have an extra week off work after the end of it, because I was absolutely exhausted by the weekend – I spent Saturday and Sunday wandering around the place like a zombie, occasionally pausing to inform Andrew that he was using thyroid tilt when talking to the cats, and to inform the cats that they had *excellent* retraction.  (Mystery has the low larynx characteristic of an opera singer, whereas Mayhem is more of a belter.  Neither of them have any problem with anchoring, or with producing sounds that resonate very well in the 2000 to 4000 Hz range to which the human ear is preferentially attuned)

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Music for a Monday: El Bajel que no recela (Jose de Nebra)

I’ve been hearing a lot about Patricia Petibon for some time, so when I found myself in a bookshop recently, with a book voucher and Patricia Petibon’s CD “Nouveau Monde”, purporting to be Baroque arias and songs themed around voyages to new lands, I decided to give it a try.

This was the first track on the CD.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8sniJaV48gQ&hl=en_US&version=3&rel=0]

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The Art of Falsetto: Katie Noonan sings Blackbird

I’ve just finished a five-day intensive course on voice anatomy and production – all sorts of useful information on the various muscles and such involved in singing, and how to use these structures in different ways and combinations to make different sounds.  And that has to be the worst description ever, but it’s been an exhausting five days, so it will do for now.

Anyway, in the course of teaching us about falsetto voicing, one of our instructors played us a brief excerpt from this clip, and I fell in love:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WaoMOJq4-Uk&w=420&h=315] Continue reading

Friday Fun: An Abridged History of Western Music (Cadenza)

So there’s this group of talented and slightly bonkers classical musicians called Cadenza, who I’m beginning to believe can do anything at all, musically speaking.  They write orchestral compositions based on mobile phone ringtones, they busk as a human jukebox, they introduce kids to classical music, and they sing lyrics that aren’t lyrics.

And they sing “It’s a Wonderful World” as Louis Armstrong could never have envisaged it…

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOZb7KeJUQ8?rel=0]What I find impressive about this – aside from the consummate cleverness of it – is how impeccably each genre is sung.  The Gregorian chant is spot on, as is the Baroque, the Jazz, the Disco, the Rap… and all the even more recent genres that I’ve never even heard of, being lost in classical music land for the most part.
My only quibble is that they only spend about half a minute on the pre-20th century stuff before heading into marching band territory.  I realise that the 20th century was a pretty innovative time, musically speaking, but I’d have liked to hear a few more forays into the world of classical music – wouldn’t you like to know what Strauss might have done with this?  Or Carl Orff?  Or even Verdi?Still magnificent stuff, however, and I’ve just subscribed to their channel.  I do warn you – once you start listening to this group, you will be there all morning…Or you could just have a listen to Louis Armstrong‘s version of It’s A Wonderful World, of course.  I find that, for all the magnificence of Cadenza’s interpretations, Armstrong sounds even better after listening to what they’ve done with it.

Monday Music: Scherza Infida (G.F. Handel)

I think my love for both Handel and Ian Bostridge are pretty well established now, and if you spend much time on this blog, you will probably find yourself getting to know them rather well.  Part of me feels that I should be looking for more variety, but honestly, this blog is about the music I love, and, well, this is it.  And this particular aria contains, I think, some truly perfect singing, especially in the repeat at the end.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVx9sGQIKng&version=3&hl=en_US&rel=0]

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Friday Fun: Cello Wars: The Phantom Cellist (Steve Sharp Nelson / John Williams)

A bit of instrumental music today, just for a change, with Steve Sharp Nelson and his identical cellist twin fighting a cello lightsaber battle while playing around with John Williams’ music. Watch out for Darth Vader’s solo…

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BgAlQuqzl8o&hl=en_US&version=3&rel=0] Continue reading

Music for a Monday: Già Riede Primavera (Paisiello)

Right now, I have a project.  Actually, right now I have way too many projects, but the Rosina Project is my current favourite.  The project is quite simply this – to create a recital programme of Rosinas from the eight operas based on Beaumarchais’ plays.  I have no idea if this is even possible, given that the four operas based on La Mère Coupable are all modern, somewhat obscure, and really hard to get hold of – and even if I do find them, it’s entirely possible that there won’t be any Rosina arias in these operas – or that I won’t be able to sing them if I do find them (though I’m actually fairly confident of my ability to get my voice around just about anything, given enough time and assuming that it doesn’t go to a top F or the like).  I don’t know yet whether this will turn out to be feasible for exam purposes, or whether it will just be a recital, or even whether I might try pulling together the stories of Susanna and Cherubino as well, to make it more fun and add some of the more entertaining duets.

But right now, I’m just having fun listening to the differences between Paisiello’s and Rossini’s versions of Il Barbiere di Siviglia.  Paisiello got there first, writing his opera in 1782.  Mozart then wrote an opera of the sequel, Le Nozze di Figaro in 1786, after which Rossini, in 1816, decided to try his own version of Il Barbiere.  As Paisiello’s Barbiere was very well-loved, this was a controversial move, and indeed, critics complained that Rossini had turned sweet, docile Rosina into a harridan (I suspect it was this aria that did the trick).

Here’s Paisiello’s version of the music lesson scene, in which Rosina performs for her strict guardian, Bartolo, waiting for him to fall asleep so that she can converse with her beloved Lindoro, disguised as a music tutor.  Rossini’s version is below the cut.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uldzvP4NVro&hl=en_US&version=3&rel=0]

I love the gracefulness of this piece – it’s very late-baroque and delicate, and even while Paisiello is making it into almost a cliché of a singing exercise sort of piece, it’s still gorgeous.  Paisiello’s Rosina is also very definitely a soprano (Rossini’s Rosina is often a mezzo, though the role is very much disputed), which is the most traditional voice part for the female romantic lead and the ingenue.  The style of music is also very light and sweet, emphasising Rosina’s innocence.

Here’s the same scene as envisaged by Rossini:

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drut-wk6h94&version=3&hl=en_US&rel=0]

You’ll note, for one thing, that this Rosina has a much lower mezzo-soprano voice – much more dramatic and adult than that of Bonelli in the previous clip.  (And isn’t it interesting that we do tend to hear a lower voice and assume an older, more sophisticated character?)  I also have to note that Berganza has a truly amazing sense of effortlessness in her singing, particularly in the repeat, and amazing low notes.  This music seems more substantial to me, too, a little less light and delicate than that of Paisiello.  And I have to laugh, because it also has the signature Rossini Rocket ending, that you can hear in practically every aria he does…

I also find it interesting that both scenes are staged and acted quite similarly.  For all her sweet innocence, Rosina is the leader in this relationship, at least at this point – she’s the one taking risks and embracing Lindoro, while he just goes along with it.  (And in this version, she’s the one drugging Bartolo before the music lesson starts, which is an interesting take on the whole thing.)

It’s a little sad to reflect that when we next see her, she will be married to Lindoro, now the Count of Almaviva, and conspiring with her maid, Susanna, to prevent him seducing her under the guise of droit de seigneur.  Perhaps Bartolo was onto something when he wanted to prevent her marriage to Lindoro?

Friday Fun: Ah, C’est Ainsi (Orphée aux Enfers – Offenbach)

This is the opera which introduced me to Natalie Dessay, and her amazing combination of comic acting and brilliant coloratura singing.  Offenbach’s version of Orpheus in the Underworld is a complete parody both of the original myth and of Monteverdi’s opera of Orpheus – he even uses musical signatures from Monteverdi when Orpheus is requesting Eurydice back from Jupiter on Mount Olympus.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zf0L0Uo1Lro&hl=en_US&version=3&rel=0]

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Music for a Monday: C’est Pour Demain (Boublil /Schönberg)

I escaped the heat on Friday by going to see Les Misérables in a nice, air-conditioned cinema.  I had a lot of misgivings about this film, it must be said.  Firstly, as a singer in training myself, I have Opinions about how things should be sung.  But more importantly, I absolutely loved the musical when I saw it as a teenager.  I learned all the songs, bought the sheet music and learned all the accompaniments, read several English translations of the text (learning, in passing, what a difference a translator can make), then saw the musical in France and bought that recording and learned all the songs in French, too.  I even tried to read the novel in French, but got stuck a couple of hundred pages in, when Hugo goes off on a digression about Napoleon.  This had been hard enough to get through in English.  In French, it was a bit too much.

So the film had a lot to live up to, musically speaking, and while it was far better than I had feared, it didn’t quite get there for me.  On the other hand, the acting, staging, and general quality of the film really were excellent enough that I could forgive the occasional vocal weakness and the deep strangeness of finding the chorus voices more appealing than those of the leads.  It made me cry in all the right places, and only made me wince a handful of times (and let’s face it, one of the reasons I don’t go to films very much is because most of them manage to fill me with ire one way or another, and it is antisocial to express this in a cinema).  Overall, I’m glad I saw it.  But it has left me with a deep craving for the French recording, which I now have only on an obsolete cassette tape.

Not much of the version I saw in Paris back in 1991 seems to have made it onto YouTube, but some of it has.  And it still makes me cry.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Up80PWRx9zc&version=3&hl=en_US&rel=0]

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